Author
Topic: Autonomous RC Heli! (Read 4008 times)

Ok. I've finished my second robot, theoretically! That's because my first robot was an epic fail. It fell from the top floor of my house right into my mother's giant ficus tree and then it caught on fire :p.

The second robot worked pretty well. It does crash sometimes, but hey, it works. I could post my videos of it, but it sucks and nobody's got anything to learn from it.

I was thinking of taking it to the next level with an RC helicopter. I can get one for about $75. There are cheaper ones, but they are too small.

Has anybody successfully made an autonomous helicopter?

Here is the outline:

-Rc heli chassis with the RC electronics taken off.-A dual motor driver(one for main rotor, one for tail).-An arduino(preferably mini or nano)-An accelerometer.-3 sharp IR sensors(2 for obstacle avoidance or object chasing and 1 for altitude) || 1 PING for altitude. Which one is better?-the rc heli motors and its battery pack for motors.-9V NI-MH for arduino.

Space and weight distribution would be a real motherf****er, but hey, it will be fun!

Ok. I've finished my second robot, theoretically! That's because my first robot was an epic fail. It fell from the top floor of my house right into my mother's giant ficus tree and then it caught on fire :p.

Please elaborate. Sounds like one heck of a story

Anyways can you link me to the helicoper? The smaller you get the harder it is to make it autonomous, its just a stability issue. Most people don't even consider making a small heli autonomous, they at least start with a 450 size (325mm blades).

Also can you fly a RC helicopter? It is necessary to fly well because you will need to control the heli while testing certain autonomous aspeccts - you cant just upload an autonomous program, turn it on and hope it works.

Regarding the first robot story, I lied. It didn't catch on fire, but it did fell from my top floor and rendered himself useless(except for the arduino which I reused). Sorry to let you down. I'm like that mean kid who told you there is no Santa Claus.

In the RC heli world those are considered micros since they are smaller than the "normal" sized helis.

That heli is way too small to make autonomous. It will barely lift anything. Also it only uses two motors, one for the upper blades and one for the lower blades (it is a coaxial helicopter). There is no tail motor. Two servos control the pitch of the lower blades for movement.

I didn't buy it yet. Recommend me some specs I should look for in the heli to buy. I had many RC few rc helis, but never opened/messed with them. I just played with them for a while until they either crashed in the swimming pool, or something like my mean german shepherd devoured them.

Can I get some suggestions on the required/recommended dimensions for the heli?

I would just get the one you linked to get started in to hobby grade RC helis. Despite having real life heli experience, the thing that makes RC helis (the hobby kind, not toys) hard is that the controls reversed if the nose of the heli is pointing towards you, instead of a real heli where you are always facing the front of the heli.

That heli will not be the actual autonomous one, that is to teach you how to fly - trust me, hobby grade RC helis are very difficult so you will need to get experience with them. The little toys you had before are nothing compared to these.

Once you can fly the one you linked, getting a 450 class helicopter will be the best choice.

I agree you need a acrobatics heli for the job...This is because this helis are produced to generate huge accelerations over their bodies...A huge accelerations means either a big loss of mass (explosion) or a huge force...In this particular, it's huge force...This means you can basically lift a nice payload without any modification... cause of the vertical acceleration force...Also...If you think you are good, stay the hell of a mobile pc platform as shown at some of the photos...Why??? Because it's a mobile problem... Problematic power source, problematic weight... what so ever....So start playing with DSPs and ARMs... And then take a position in NASA... no wonder pal....

Logged

For whom the interrupts toll...

P.S. I've been inactive for almost a year... Don't give promises but I'll try to complete my tutorials. I'll let you know when..

That's because my first robot was an epic fail. It fell from the top floor of my house right into my mother's giant ficus tree and then it caught on fire :p.

yea, my 1st was an epic fail too, so welcome to the club . . . did you get video of it?

Anyway, I'm also working on a robot helicopter. You'll see a few helicopter vids in the SoR youtube account, but nothing autonomous yet. I plan to have it working this winter. Mine will be designed for indoor use, navigating doorways and such.

The GPS signal in Thailand is extremely poor, so can't do an outdoor heli here . . .

I saw this heli at the local toy store, they have a version where the dome is clear plastic so you can put like sharp IR or something in it. Its my #1 choice for the next heli I buy. Currently I already have a Blade CX, but haven't tried to hack it yet. The Blade has more than enough power to lift what I want, but 10 minute battery life means only short flights.

For now, I got that heli and played with it, but it's not good to lift anything up. I was gonna do it with IR sensors, but if I decide on a powerful 3D heli, it has to be able to fly outdoors, and the sun would mess up the sensors' readings I think.

So accelerometers and sonars would do it for outdoor flights.

Meanwhile, I am experimenting with a massive autonomous rover. I wanna make this robot from scratch, not with an RC car chassis. I have 4 Continuous rotation servos from HITEC, 3 sharp IR rangefinders(10-80 cm), and I am having trouble with attaching some massive wheels to the servos, because I can't find big metal servo horns.

I will keep updating this thread as the project is advancing. Good luck!

Well, I will have to go off-topic. I used an rc car chassis and yes, it is WAY more durable. But it feels like cheating and it's not the same feeling of happiness when you see it working. When you build something from scratch, and then you see the final product, it makes you feel good.

Also, rc car chassis' are made out of hard plastic. For this rover, I want something that is flexible. So I found a rectangular piece of cork and it is very strong, yet flexible, but not very flexible. It is exactly what I need. The rover should be able to climb on objects like books in my house.

hi... my project is an autonomous heli too... i got a 450 size helicopter and i'm learning to fly right now... i am able to hover for a couple of minutes or so but my blade cracked against my brother's car's chassis... lol!!!...funny...